DEA: The U.S. opioid crisis is 'ever-increasing'

For the first time in 29 years, drug overdose deaths are on the decline, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control (CDC).

But overdose deaths from synthetic opioids were still on the rise.

“The opioid threat (controlled prescription drugs, synthetic drugs, and heroin) continues at ever-increasing epidemic levels, affecting large portions of the United States,” the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) stated in its 2019 National Drug Threat Assessment.

Fentanyl deaths have spiked over recent years. (Graphic: David Foster/Yahoo Finance)
Fentanyl deaths have spiked over recent years. (Graphic: David Foster/Yahoo Finance)

The report specifically named fentanyl as “the primary driver behind the ongoing opioid crisis.” Synthetic opioids like fentanyl accounted for nearly 70% of all drug overdose deaths in 2018.

“Really at its core, what we have is an addiction crisis,” Jim Carroll, the director of the U.S. Office of National Drug Control Policy, told Yahoo Finance. “This is really different from where this was 20 or 30 years ago, when I started my career as a drug prosecutor, criminal prosecutor, mainly during drug cases, and that people either had an addiction to cocaine or to heroin.”

He added that the “rise of fentanyl, imported illicitly into the U.S. over the last eight years or so, has just been dramatic.”

Fentanyl has ravaged certain states. (SOURCE: The DEA's 2019 NATIONAL DRUG THREAT ASSESSMENT)
Fentanyl has ravaged certain states. (SOURCE: The DEA's 2019 NATIONAL DRUG THREAT ASSESSMENT)

‘There’s more work to be done’

President Trump celebrated the decline in overdose deaths during his 2020 State of the Union address. But Sheila Vakharia, the deputy director of the Department of Research and Academic Engagement at Drug Policy Alliance, said it’s “too soon for a victory lap.”

“It’s important to acknowledge it when we see these reductions because these are real human lives,” she told Yahoo Finance. “When we see that we haven’t lost as many in previous years, we have to acknowledge that perhaps we are doing something right.

“But we’re at this point where we are still losing tens of thousands of lives a year. 57,000 deaths is still too many. It tells us there’s more work to be done.”

Drug overdose deaths declined in 2018, but fentanyl overdose deaths increased. (Graphic: David Foster/Yahoo Finance)
Drug overdose deaths declined in 2018, but fentanyl overdose deaths increased. (Graphic: David Foster/Yahoo Finance)

Fentanyl is still a major player at hand. The DEA report stated that the drug’s availability throughout the U.S. in 2018 was “high and increasing,” indicating that it’s rapidly spreading. The street fentanyl is primarily from China or Mexico and is particularly prevalent in regions like the Great Lakes, the Midwest, and the Northeast.

“There are new source and transit countries emerging as important players in the fentanyl threat,” according to the DEA report. China has made regulatory steps to curb fentanyl production. The DEA predicts, though, this will lead to India and Mexico ramping up their own operations.

‘Harsher penalties aren’t going to get drugs off of our streets’

Prescription drugs, which led a previous wave of the opioid crisis, are still an issue. CDC data shows that there were 17,029 prescription opioid-involved fatal overdoses in 2017 — about 47 people a day. The states with the highest rates of these deaths were West Virginia, Maryland, Kentucky, and Utah.